The New York Times: “the initial purpose of the device will be for streaming music, the eventual use could be much wider.”
19. Hm, O.K. That could be anything, really. A radio, a shower radio … Let’s see: has the entertainment device been in the works for more than a year?

The New York Times: “The entertainment device has been in the works for more than a year.”
18. Interesting. It could still be a radio or a shower radio. Is the manufacturer of the “entertainment device” a company that would be capable of producing a shower radio?

The New York Times: “Google made a $12.5 billion deal to buy the handset maker Motorola Mobility, the most likely manufacturer of the device.”
17. Motorola, Motorola, interesting. Motorola Mobility. Maybe a shower radio that could travel to multiple showers! Is the “entertainment device” something that would go in my bathroom?

The New York Times: “Google has talked openly about its designs on consumers’ living rooms … Google’s larger goal, a person closely tied to the project said, was to connect everything in the home to the Internet, including light bulbs, speakers and TV sets.”
16. That’s odd: why would anyone put a shower radio, or a shower, for that matter, in his living room? No, no! That’s not our question!

The New York Times: [Blank stare.]
15. Fine, we’ll count it. God, you’re in a mood today. Our real question: will the “entertainment device” have Wi-Fi?

The New York Times: “The device will have Bluetooth and Wi-Fi and, as Google noted in the application, it will ‘connect to other home electronics equipment.’”
14. It will have Wi-Fi. It could still be a shower radio, or it could be a Starbucks, or it could be some fantastical third thing we’ve somehow yet to think of. That is our final guess.